making performance of bus_dma drivers not completely suck on the DECstation.
XXX R4000 case is still abysmal, because some other data structure
modification is required to deal with the virtually-indexed R4000 cache.
controllers (including SCSI id 7 on the 2100/3100).
- On the pmax (2100,3100) set the host SCSI id to 6.
- Move disk and tape config for the second ASC controller from the GENERIC
config file to scsi.pmax so all configurations can use the second
controller.
* ibus (virtual bus for baseboard direct-attach deviecs)
* 5100 support, using ibus
* rename "clock" to mcclock for future support of Qbus machiens
* use sys/dev/dec mcclock_pad32 machinery for pmax mcclock
* reworked TC config code.
Also make TC framebuffer-console search table-driven.
Does not yet include "tcasic" layer; there's no such hardware on DECstations
and nothing for a tcasic layer to do.
into sys/dev/dec and split into a clockfns layer and a "middle" layer
for other DEC systems which use mcclocks with each onchip byte
register padded out to a 32-bit word.
Clone alpha/alpha/mcclock (also duplicated in pmax port) into
sys/dev/dec, and ifdef for default clockrates on pmax and alpha.
Use new machinery on pmax for ibus,ioasic attached mcclocks.
read and write compare register (controls cycle-driven periodic interrupt).
Use cycle counter for microsecond time on mips3, but for now only on
3min motherboards (5000/150). the MAXINE baseboard microsecond
counter is more stable and I don't ave no 5000/260 to test.
XXX clkread() is a mess, it should be rewritten.
XXX should add nanotime() to give inkernel nanosecond resolution,
and then microtime() reworked to use nanotime().
* dec_5100.c: sysconf, interrupt, and motherboard (drain writebuffer)
support for 5100.
* support for hardware kludge in 5100: sii DMA buffer is hardware
padded to alternate 32-bit words, not alternating 16-bit halfwords.
* 5100 has no framebuffer, console is wired to serial port 0.
With ibus support, boots as far as exec'ing init, and hangs.
a HAVE_GCC28 check-variable that can now be used to add other gcc-2.8
flags in cases where they may be useful, or to remove gcc 2.7.2 "bug
workaround" flags.)